WASHINGTON (ABP) — A new study described as the first of its kind suggests Americans believe the United States is both especially blessed by God and especially responsible to use its power wisely.
Echoing the results of another recent poll, the survey also found younger evangelicals are to the left of their elders on most major social issues except abortion.
Results from the survey, titled “Religion and America's Role in the World” and sponsored by the U.N. Foundation and Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly, found majorities of the public believe God has “uniquely blessed” America (61 percent) and the United States should serve as a Christian example to the rest of the world (59 percent). A similar majority — 60 percent — said the United States has a “moral obligation to have a role in world affairs.”
However, other survey questions revealed what pollster Anna Greenberg called “a real ambivalence” about whether U.S. actions comport with the nation's blessings and responsibilities.
For instance, 79 percent of respondents agreed that U.S. involvement in foreign affairs sometimes causes more harm than good. And two-thirds (67 percent) said America's foreign relations “have gotten pretty seriously off track,” versus only 25 percent who said they were headed “in the right direction.”
Greenberg, vice president of Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research, which conducted the study, and other analysts found remarkable similarities in many areas across political and religious groups.
Evangelicals were more likely to believe America was blessed by God and had a special moral obligation, more likely to be interventionist and more positive about the current state of U.S. foreign policy. But their numbers didn't depart dramatically from those of the public at large on most questions.
“We find very strong majorities favor the U.S. having a very active role in the world,” Greenberg said. “Frankly, this was a surprise to me.”
Timothy Shah, an expert on religion and foreign policy for the Council on Foreign Relations, said the results suggested to him that the American public has an almost Calvinist view of itself with regard to its international engagement.
“I think Americans — like Calvin and Calvinists — tend to have a sense that they are in a kind of covenant, a special relationship with God,” he said. However, along with that covenant is a Calvinist “special vocation or sense of calling” and “an element of criticism” when policy decisions go awry.
“What the survey strikingly shows is that America and Americans, evangelical and non-evangelical, hold these things” — that the United States is both blessed by God and responsible to be introspective in foreign-policy choices — “in a remarkable tension,” Shah said.
“In other words, many Americans believe that they have this special relationship with God. But they also believe that America in fact falls short, and falls short pretty drastically.”
Younger evangelicals were more liberal than their elders on a number of key diplomacy-related subjects. For instance, 58 percent of 18-29-year-old evangelicals considered combating global warming an extremely or very important foreign-policy issue, while only 47 percent of older evangelicals did.
Young evangelicals also were far more likely to consider global warming a challenge that required “immediate action.” Their elders were more likely to say it was “a long-term threat” that required further study “before taking drastic action.”
But, on abortion, younger evangelicals closely mirrored their elders, with significant majorities opposing legal abortion in most or all cases.
The poll of 1,000 adults — plus an oversample of 400 evangelicals ages 18-29 — was conducted Sept. 4-21. It had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percent.